Sensor Sense: Piezoelectric Force Sensors
Some materials generate an electric charge when placed under mechanical stress.
For example, a 2-kN force properly applied to a cubic-centimetersized quartz crystal produces over 12.5 kV. Voltage created by an applied stress is called piezoelectricity.
Unlike strain gages that can measure static forces, piezoelectric force sensors are mostly used for dynamic- force measurements such as oscillation, impact, or highspeed compression or tension. Any force applied to the piezoelectric sensing element produces a separation of charges within the atomic structure of the material, generating an electrostatic output voltage. The polarity of the voltage generated depends on the atomic structure of the material and the direction in which the force is applied.
However, any leakage path lets electrons redistribute across the material, dropping the voltage output back to zero. Internal leakage paths are formed by impurities within the crystal while external paths are created by the electronics used to measure the voltage generated. All leakages must be considered to determine the discharge time constant (DTC). The DTC typically follows an exponential curve similar to an RC time constant and is used to determine the sensor’s lowest frequency response.
In a typical quartz-based force sensor, a charge-collection electrode is sandwiched between two quartz-crystal elements. The quartz elements are oriented to supply the same polarity voltage to the electrode when compressed, while the opposite polarity is applied to the sensor housing. This assembly resides between two mounting disks held together by an elastic, beryllium-copper stud and then weld-sealed within the enclosure to prevent contamination. The stud preloads the quartz elements to assure all parts are in intimate contact and to provide good linearity and tensile-force measurements.
When a force is applied to the impact cap, the quartz elements generate an output voltage which can be routed directly to a charge amplifier or converted to a low-impedance signal within the sensor. The use of the direct sensor output demands that any connector, cable, and charge amplifier input must maintain a high insulation resistance on the order of >10≠″ Ω.
Low-impedance quartz sensors have an internal MOSFET amplifier. Its output is a low-impedance voltage signal that uses standard cabling. However, force sensors with internal amplifiers do require external power to operate the amp.

This cross-section diagram of a Series 208 Quartz Force Sensor from PCB Piezotronics Inc. of Depew, N.Y., shows the basic assembly of a piezoelectric sensor.
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Comments
Hi, I was wondering if the
Hi,
I was wondering if the Piezoelectric System is water proof or not!
thank you!
I'm sure it's possible for
I'm sure it's possible for the sensor to be made waterproof. I recommend contacting PCB Piezotronics with your exact needs.
Static force
hi,
I'm working on the use of smart materials in obtaining the pressure distribution due to human body weight.
do you think one can use Piezoelectric sensors in measuring a static force - such as the body weight of a bedridden patient? Will there be inaccuracy in the measurement?
Thanks for the help in advance
Aria
Hi, Aria. Well, if you look
Hi, Aria.
Well, if you look at the answer to Matt's question, you'll see piezoelectric sensors only work with dynamic (changing) loads. They produce no output for static loads. You'll need to use a different type of sensor that works with static forces, maybe something along the lines of a resistive load cell.
Quartz
Dear Sir:
I would like to know if quartz, when deformed by mechanical
stress, produces a CONSTANT voltage. Or is the voltage only
present at the initial strain? Does quartz produce a constant
dc voltage? Thank you for your time!
Sincerely,
Matthew
Re: Quartz
Hi, Matthew.
Piezoelectric materials produce voltage only as the crystal lattice within the material undergoes deformation by an external force. Once the force becomes a constant, that is, the force is no longer changing the shape of the material, electrical output stops. When the force is removed, the piezoelectric material creates an opposite electrical polarity as it changes back to its original shape. Thus any piezoelectric material produces an ac output voltage as it undergoes repeated cycles of compression and tension. However, if you apply too much force, the piezoelectric material shatters, destroying it.
Quartz was one of the first piezoelectric materials, and was fundamental in the early days of radio. Quartz crystals were designed to vibrate at specific frequencies, so they acted like small tuning forks to set the operating frequency of the radio. To change frequency, you changed the crystal. Today's digital radios still use quartz crystals to set a master frequency that the digital circuits use to synthesize any frequency you want.
Hi, could you help me? If I
Hi,
could you help me?
If I have an applied force, which increases linear, is it possible to measure this signal with a piezosensor? I don´t understand what happens with the offset? I mean what does it really mean a Force of 20 N for example, if I´m not sure where my zero is?.
Thank you very much
Diana
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